causal meet submodular
Causal meets Submodular: Subset Selection with Directed Information
We study causal subset selection with Directed Information as the measure of prediction causality. Two typical tasks, causal sensor placement and covariate selection, are correspondingly formulated into cardinality constrained directed information maximizations. To attack the NP-hard problems, we show that the first problem is submodular while not necessarily monotonic.
Causal meets Submodular: Subset Selection with Directed Information
We study causal subset selection with Directed Information as the measure of prediction causality. Two typical tasks, causal sensor placement and covariate selection, are correspondingly formulated into cardinality constrained directed information maximizations. To attack the NP-hard problems, we show that the first problem is submodular while not necessarily monotonic. And the second one is nearly'' submodular. To substantiate the idea of approximate submodularity, we introduce a novel quantity, namely submodularity index (SmI), for general set functions.
Reviews: Causal meets Submodular: Subset Selection with Directed Information
There are really two issues with this paper. The first one is the discussion on how to use directed information for causality. Unfortunately, the word causality means two different things and these should be separated (and this discussion should be mentioned in this manuscript I think). The first concept of causality is really *prediction* of a time series using other time series. This prediction respects time and hence people call that causal.
Causal meets Submodular: Subset Selection with Directed Information
Zhou, Yuxun, Spanos, Costas J.
We study causal subset selection with Directed Information as the measure of prediction causality. Two typical tasks, causal sensor placement and covariate selection, are correspondingly formulated into cardinality constrained directed information maximizations. To attack the NP-hard problems, we show that the first problem is submodular while not necessarily monotonic. And the second one is nearly'' submodular. To substantiate the idea of approximate submodularity, we introduce a novel quantity, namely submodularity index (SmI), for general set functions.